Abstract

AbstractScalar transport in vegetated flow plays an important role in natural river ecology. In this study, a scalar transport model for the flow with flexible submerged vegetation is developed. The turbulent structure and scalar transport characteristics in the flow without vegetation, and with rigid and flexible vegetation are compared. The results show that the scalar diffusion in the flow is mainly governed by the turbulent diffusion outside the diffusion boundary layer. The wake flow downstream of rigid vegetation and the small‐scale Kelvin–Helmholtz (KH) vortices near the top of the canopy are the main reasons to enhance the turbulence intensity in the flow and to significantly increase the turbulence diffusion of scalars. However, the flexible vegetation movement induces the large‐scale KH vortices near the top of the canopy. It also causes to increase the turbulence intensity in the flow, to redistribute the scalar concentration in a wide range, to increase the scalar concentration across the flow depth, and to increase the scalar turbulence diffusion intensity. In the flow with rigid vegetation, the values of the turbulent Schmidt number vary from 0.72 to 1.93 below the top of the canopy, while in the flow with flexible vegetation, they vary from 0.58 to 1.99 only near the top of the canopy. Above the top of the canopy, the Schmidt number ranges from 0.48 to 0.84. The results are useful for the parameterization of scalar transport in natural vegetated rivers.

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